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Dear Al K.,

"Coking" is a process/phenomenon in which there is undesirable accumulation of carbon (coke) deposits in the internal combustion engine or in a refinery plant. This is part of distillation procedure whereby petroleum product is distilled to dryness as per ASTM D86.

As per me, this should be aptly called "overheating", "smoking" or "cracking" leading to deterioration in properties of lube/gear oil resulting in carbon or soot formation.

I'd like to have comments from more members.

Regards.

sm
I feel just fine to call it coking. This term is used in the industry from the time first refineries started refining crude oil. I agree with the sm’s opinion/explanation. In addition, high temperatures cause evaporation of all lighter fractions thus concentrating such oil into coke. Viscosity (thickness) will depend on the temperature and the time of oil’s exposure to those temperatures. Considering the viscosity of a coke, I think that in this situation some type of polymerization of molecules occurs rather than breakdown of C-H chains, because shorter molecules would cause viscosity to decrease rather than increase.
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